On Tue, 5 Sep 2000, Pierre MacKay wrote:
> Again, if you know where the character really resides, you
> can set in a
> (SETCHAR D nnn) to point to it
> You can simply copy the SETCHAR lines from
> CHARACTER 94 and CHARACTER 126 into the recipes for
> CHARACTER 2 and CHARACTER 3.
> Sometimes this sort of direct manipulation is preferable
> when you are starting out from a botched original.
It worked, thank you! But this is probably a common enough problem that
fontinst provides some remedy for it. Is this what \setglyph is for?
Something like
\setglyph{tilde}
\glyph{asciitilde}{1000}
\endsetglyph
Hmmm. I'll have to try.
With kind regards,
Primoz
--
Primo&zcaron; Peterlin, Inštitut za biofiziko, Med. fakulteta, Univerza v Ljubljani
Lipi&ccaron;eva 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenija. primoz.peterlin@biofiz.mf.uni-lj.si
Tel: +386-1-5437632, fax: +386-1-4315127, http://sizif.mf.uni-lj.si/~peterlin/